In Gaza, call to prayer rings out from bombarded mosque
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[November 30, 2023]
By Fadi Shana and Mohammed Salem
KHAN YOUNIS (Reuters) - Balanced on a steep slab of fissured concrete
with rods of twisted metal poking out and the remnants of a dome slanted
at a 45-degree angle behind him, a young muezzin in a baseball cap
called Muslims to prayer from atop a bombarded mosque in Gaza.
The minaret, where the muezzin would usually stand, was still upright
but appeared precarious, with a chunk missing from the balustrade at the
top and the base resting on the jumbled ruin of the Al-Touba Mosque in
Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip.
The mosque is one of many in Gaza that have been hit by Israeli strikes
in its war against Hamas. Israel accuses the Islamist group of using
mosques to conceal tunnel shafts, missile and rocket launch sites and
other infrastructure.
Hamas denies this and accuses Israel of targeting places of worship
including mosques and churches and making false accusations aimed at
justifying civilian deaths.
Drone footage of three mosques in Khan Younis, filmed by Reuters on
Wednesday, the sixth day of a truce that has since been extended by
another day, showed the extent of the destruction of the religious
buildings.
At Al-Touba, the dome that used to rise above the multi-storey mosque
was completely gone. The only part of it still recognisable was its
circular base, tilted sideways on the collapsed roof where the muezzin
stood.
At Al-Ansari Mosque in a different part of town, a pile of dusty prayer
mats could be seen in a chaotic pile inside a room filled with cement
that had been crushed into what looked like pebbles. Tiles with Arabic
writing and twisted metal railings were visible in a gap between a
fallen ceiling and tilted walls.
Both mosques were located in densely built-up areas, with what looked
like apartment blocks adjacent to them.
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A mosque destroyed in Israeli strikes during the conflict lies in
ruin, amid a temporary truce between the Palestinian Islamist group
Hamas and Israel, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip November
29, 2023. REUTERS/Mohammed Salem
At a third mosque, Al-Ameen Mohammed, part of the yellow dome was
still there, but with a huge gash at the top. The structure was also
tilted at a steep angle as one side of the building below had
collapsed.
Next to the mosque was an open expanse of sandy terrain where a tent
camp for displaced people had sprung up. Beyond that were apartment
blocks and the Mediterranean Sea.
The war was triggered by Hamas militants who rampaged through
southern Israel on Oct. 7, killing 1,200 people including babies and
children and taking 240 hostages of all ages, according to Israel.
Vowing to destroy Hamas in response, Israel launched a military
assault on the densely populated Gaza Strip that has killed more
than 15,000 people, 40% of them children, according to Palestinian
health officials. A further 6,500 are missing, many feared still
buried under rubble.
Two-thirds of Gazans have been displaced, most sheltering in Khan
Younis and other southern areas after Israel ordered the complete
evacuation of the northern half of the tiny coastal strip. U.N.
Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has described the conditions in
Gaza as an epic humanitarian catastrophe.
(Writing by Estelle Shirbon; Editing by Alison Williams)
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